AltWeeklies Wire

'Courtroom Cowboy' is a Rich, Rewarding Readnew

Along with the court cases, Cipriano introduces us to Jim Beasely the man, a remarkable, evangelical trial lawyer who flew fighter jets, hunted big game and was so committed to work, he was unable to vacation, despite a love of fishing and owning a huge boat.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Liz Spikol  |  01-05-2009  |  Nonfiction

Eugene Jarecki Has the 'Big Picture' and a New Book on Warnew

Jareki's print debut supplements his 2006 film, Why We Fight, while the cafe he co-founded in Vermont expresses his "desire to support social betterment."
Seven Days  |  Mike Ives  |  12-29-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

The Dread Zone: It's the Only Thing We Have to Fearnew

Despite years of religious instruction by well-meaning priests, nuns, and lay ministers, as well as my own family, on that dark night of the soul long ago, it occurred to me that as nice a story as that made, it was a bit far-fetched. I realized that not only was death absolutely real and directly applicable to me, but that death most probably meant, well, death. As in lights out. Game over. It meant you no longer were.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jason A. Zwiker  |  12-21-2008  |  Books

How Michael Wolff Bagged Rupert Murdochnew

How did a controversial media reporter get total access to the most famous newspaper man in the world? He just asked.
Boston Phoenix  |  Daniel McCarthy  |  12-18-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

'Slavery by Another Name' Examines Post-Civil War Convict Labornew

Douglas Blackmon argues -- passionately, forcefully and convincingly -- that by any measure, blacks in the states of the former Confederacy saw their freedom so warped and constrained in the decades after the Civil War that the overwhelming majority were not in any meaningful way free.
The Texas Observer  |  Todd Moye  |  12-17-2008  |  Nonfiction

Winter Reading: 58 Reasons to Be Anti-socialnew

What we squeeze into Winter Reading each year is not a best-of list, exactly, though we do strive to include those books we want to recommend to friends, parents, anyone with a pair of eyes. It's more of a case for reading, for sharing the wonders of a good story.
Eugene Weekly  |  Staff and freelancers  |  12-16-2008  |  Books

Lewis Hyde's Classic Manifesto 'The Gift' Gets a Timely Re-Releasenew

What this book conveys more than almost any other book I've read is the sense of abundance artists develop from grounding their sense of self in something other than money or "stuff." At this time, perhaps more than any other, this book will also speak to readers who don't necessarily consider themselves artists.
Montreal Mirror  |  Juliet Waters  |  12-15-2008  |  Nonfiction

This 'Almanac' is Less a Book, More a Shot Heard 'round the Sportswriting Worldnew

For all of those who absolutely love the sport of basketball, but have grown tired of the tired cliches that weigh the game down, then Macrophenomenal is your new bible -- proof that if there is any justice in this cruel world, sports writing as we know it is about to change for the better.
The Portland Mercury  |  Ezra Ace Caraeff  |  12-12-2008  |  Nonfiction

'Big Necessity' Looks at Some of the Problems with Poopnew

If we can remember the political dimensions of this most personal act, George suggests, we may one day find our way out of the muck.
New Haven Advocate  |  Jason B. Jones  |  12-09-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The Big Rich' Covers Almost a Century of Texas Oilnew

For those with an interest in contemporary Texas history this is a must-read; indeed, its reach stretches well beyond Texas. The oil rich of Texas loomed large on the national horizon, and there was a time that if they pawed the earth, politicians trembled.
The Texas Observer  |  Dave Richards  |  12-03-2008  |  Nonfiction

'In Search of Bill Clinton' Revisits the Monica Affairnew

Was Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky merely the weakness of an inveterate horndog -- or something else? Psychologist John D. Gartner explains.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Violet Glaze  |  12-02-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Lennard Davis Argues that Obsession is Largely in the Eye of the Beholdernew

Obsession: A History is the UIC professor's study of the rise and bifurcated path of obsessive behavior as both an illness and an ideal in the modern world.
Chicago Reader  |  Deanna Isaacs  |  11-24-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Once-Respected Physicist Frank Tipler Goes Off the Deep End in Latest Booknew

Tipler's main thesis in The Physics of Christianity is that the tenets of Christianity, from the Virgin Birth to the coming Apocalypse, can all be explained by physics -- no faith required.
NOW Magazine  |  Joseph Wilson  |  11-24-2008  |  Nonfiction

'The Double Life of a Rebel' Looks at Poet Arthur Rimbaudnew

This handy, brief biography is published by Atlas & Co. in its continuing series of "Eminent Lives."
The Memphis Flyer  |  Leonard Gill  |  11-21-2008  |  Nonfiction

New Bio Puts Lusty Dusty Springfield in Her Historical Placenew

Annie J. Randall blends scholarly interest with groupie fascination in Dusty! Queen of the Postmods, which goes so far as to suggest that Dusty was not only cool but also postmodern.
New York Press  |  Felicia Feaster  |  11-20-2008  |  Nonfiction

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